Sunday, March 19, 2017

A
SECRET government report has found that bikie gang laws introduced
following fatal outlaw gang clashes are useless and should be abolished.
The
laws, introduced in different states following violent clashes between
insurgent rival gangs, have been ineffective and police anti-gang squads
have stopped using them.
The NSW law was brought in after the fatal March 2009 brawl at Sydney Domestic Airport between 18 bikies from rival gangs.
Comanchero
gang president Mahmoud “Mick” Hawi murdered Hells Angel Anthony Zervas
in a melee amid innocent travellers in the departure hall where Zervas
was bludgeoned with a bollard and stabbed in the chest and abdomen.
Seven days later, Zervas’ welder brother Peter was shot eight times as he drove into his mother’s apartment block.
Peter Zervas survived, and Hawi was charged — and eventually sentenced to 28 years prison — but police feared a bikie had begun.
The
NSW Government rushed in laws under a new “criminal organisations
control” crimes act to curb the actions of bikies and other criminal
gangs.
But as stated by the new the report, obtained exclusively by news.com.au, the laws have proven ineffectual.
Tabled
quietly in NSW Parliament last week, the “Review of police use of
powers under the Crimes (Criminal Organisations Control) Act 2012” was
completed in November last year but has remained secret until now.
In it, Acting NSW State Ombudsman Professor John McMillan says that
laws introduced to declare outlaw motorcycle gangs (OMCGs) illegal
criminal organisations had failed.
“We have concluded that the Act
does not provide police with a viable mechanism to tackle criminal
organisations, and is unlikely to ever be able to be used effectively,”
the report says.
The Ombudsman recommended the laws in NSW be
repealed, but also outlined how they had failed in Queensland and South
Australia and laid fallow in Western Australia and the Northern
Territory.
He said that “despite the concerted efforts of a
dedicated unit within the Gangs Squad of the NSW Police Force ... no
organisation has been declared to be a criminal organisation under the
scheme.”
The NSW Police Gangs Squad spent three years in the
attempt to have some of Australia’s most vicious and violent gangs
declared illegal.
“Concern about the activities of criminal organisations, and in particular OMCGs, had been growing nationally,” the report says.
In
NSW, the Gangs Squad has had to rely on other policing methods and its
own skills to investigate the gang rivalry which has resulted in the
public executions of rivals on Sydney streets.
In the last year, Brothers for Life gang associate and mafia member
Pasquale Barbaro was executed last November outside his home in suburban
Earlwood, in Sydney.
A month earlier, police had surrounded the
Georges Hall home of Hells Angels associate and underworld hitman Hamad
Assaad and were preparing to raid him when he was shot dead in broad
daylight in his driveway.
Also shot dead in his driveway was
Michael “Ruthless” Davey, aka Micky D’ and sergeant at arms of the
Rebels outlaw motorcycle gang who was executed in March last year.
Just
last month, Rebels gang member Ricky Ciano — who lived a luxury
lifestyle police believe due to drug dealing — was found shot in the
head in his BMW sports car in the Blue Mountains, NSW.
But as the
new report has concluded, control of such violent activity and
investigation of the gang perpetrators was not possible or effective
using the Crimes (Criminal Organisations Control) Act of 2012.
The
new laws, which replaced the emergency 2009 bill brought in immediately
after the Sydney airport bikie brawl, “are onerous, resource-intensive,
and involve difficulties”, the report says.
The legislation aimed
to target outlaw bikie gangs by declaring them criminal groups,
restricting members’ association to “earn a dishonest living”.
This was meant to reduce the vulnerability of business at high risk “bikie and organised crime infiltration”.
But
in NSW one application against an outlaw bikie gang was mounted, only
to have a member of the Hells Angels successfully challenge it in the
High Court.
As a result, police abandoned the legislation in 2015.
Instead,
NSW Gangs Squad detectives have been targeting criminal and outlaw
bikie groups with other powers to more effectively control gang crime.
The
Gangs Squad employed “a modernised consorting offence, expanded powers
to search for firearms, and restrictions on entry to licensed premises
by people wearing OMCG ‘colours’ and insignia”.
In contrast with
the failed legislation, NSW Police launched the crack Strike Force
Raptor, Australia’s first specifically targeting the criminal activity
and anti-social behaviour of outlaw motorcycle gangs.
In five years, Raptor officers arrested almost 2,500 people, and charged them with more than 5,500 offences.
They
seized 636 firearms, more than 46,000 rounds of ammunition, in excess
of $15 million worth of illicit drugs, and close to $4 million worth of
cash and assets from gang members and their associates.
Five other of Australia’s eight states and territories adopted similar legislation to the 2012 NSW Act.
“By
restricting members of criminal organisations from associating with
each other and recruiting new members, the legislation aimed to disrupt
their activities and, in doing so, prevent crime,” the report says.
But the report found that “police in other states and territories have experienced similar difficulties.
“Despite high expectations ... in practice no police force in Australia has been able to
successfully utilise the legislation.”
As a result, “no declarations have been made in relation to any organisations”, meaning that the laws were useless.
NSW
Police Gangs Squad members have implemented several ways of
infiltrating and controlling bikie gangs, including through the
establishment of a Criminal Organisation Unit.
Last year,
Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced she would abolish her
state’s Vicious Lawless Association Disestablishment act, or VLAD laws.
The VLAD laws followed a massive bikie brawl at Broadbeach on the Gold Coast in 2013 between the Hells Angels and The Finks.

BIKIE GANG LAWS: STATE BY STATE

QUEENSLAND

Queensland
Police made one application with in excess of 6000 pages of evidence
against the Gold Coast chapter of the Finks OMCG, but it did not
proceed.

Described as “frustrating and ultimately dispiriting” for the police the failed application cost $1.9m in staff costs alone.

A
review of the Queensland’s organised crime control legislation in 2015
found that it was “prohibitively expensive, slow and cumbersome to use”.

The VLAD laws will be abolished in 2017.

SOUTH AUSTRALIA

In
May 2009, the South Australian Commissioner of Police successfully
applied to have the Finks OMCG declared as a criminal organisation.

The Commissioner then applied to have 12 Finks members prevented from associating with each other.

Two alleged Finks members challenged the law and the High Court of Australia found the rulings were constitutionally invalid.

The
SA police Commissioner sought a declaration against the Rebels gang,
but they were discontinued following the Finks’ win in the High Court.

NORTHERN TERRITORY

Although
it has been reported that “Northern Territory Police devoted
considerable effort to developing an application against the Darwin
Chapter of” an outlaw gang, the NT’s

Serious Crime Control Act 2009 remains unused.

WESTERN AUSTRALIA

Western Australian Police have not exercised any powers under their 2012 criminal organisations control legislation.